History Lessons: First jobs of famous historians
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[January 05, 2018]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Historians study the
beginnings of things, even their first work experiences. For the latest
in Reuters’ “First Jobs” series, we talked to a few prominent historians
about their introductions to employment.
Drew Gilpin Faust
President, Harvard University; author, “This Republic of Suffering”
First job: HUD intern
I grew up in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. My first full-time job, after
graduating from college, was working on the Model Cities Program for the
Department of Housing and Urban Development in Philadelphia.
This was back in 1968, so it turned out to be a pivotal time in the
American experience. They had us go around to communities in states like
Virginia, Pennsylvania and Maryland, talking to people about all the
issues they faced. It was a real introduction to urban life for a girl
who had grown up on a farm surrounded by horses, sheep, cows and pigs.
Mary Frances Berry
History Professor, University of Pennsylvania; author, “Five Dollars and
a Pork Chop Sandwich”
First job: babysitter
When I was 11 or 12 I had a job taking care of a toddler in Nashville
during the summer. One day, I saw phonograph records on the shelf, so I
took some down and played them. One of them I really liked – I think it
was Beethoven’s symphonies. When the mother came home and I told her I
really enjoyed her music, she got mad at me, because she hadn’t told me
I could touch them.
I didn’t say anything to my mother, because I didn’t know what she would
think. But when I told one of my favorite aunts what had happened, she
told me to stay out of white people’s things, because they would think I
was a troublemaker.
What I learned about myself that day, is that I have always been very
curious about things – even things I am not supposed to know about. I
like to ask questions, and find out stuff that other people think is not
my business. Over my career, I ended up going to lots of places I wasn’t
supposed to go, and asking questions I wasn’t supposed to ask. And now,
every time I listen to Beethoven, I think about that story.
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Drew Gilpin Faust speaks to reporters after being introduced as the
28th president of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts
February 11, 2007. REUTERS/Adam Hunger
Niall Ferguson
Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution; author, "The Square and the Tower"
First job: Bartender
My working life started - and ended - in a Hell's Angels pub in the town of Ayr,
in the west of Scotland. The name of the pub was Rabbie’s, in honor of the poet
Robert Burns, Ayr’s most famous son.
There was little that was poetic about the denizens of Rabbie’s. They would get
off their motorbikes, lumber up to the bar and mutter unintelligible things
like: “Pintofheavyandafamousgrouse,” which meant they wanted a pint of McEwan’s
Export and a glass of a popular blended Scotch whisky. I would reply 'I beg your
pardon?' and they would lean over the bar and grab me by the testicles and say
the exact same thing, only louder.
I lasted a week. Nevertheless, I had learned something important, namely that I
was constitutionally unsuited to unskilled manual work. I resolved never to do
it again.
When I arrived at Oxford, I encountered men whose job it was to sit in
book-lined studies with oak panels and mullioned windows and read, write or talk
about history. And that was for roughly half the year. The rest of their time
was their own to spend in dusty archives or in country houses, as they saw fit.
My uncle used to ask my father periodically: ‘Has Niall got a job yet, or is he
still at the college?’ The answer is no, I am still at the college. And I have
never been back to Rabbie’s.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and Andrew Hay)
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